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Tag: Collections: World

  • Russia Says It Fired Its Oreshnik Missile at Ukraine in Response to Strike on Putin’s Residence

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    Jan 9 (Reuters) – ‌The ​Russian military ‌said on Friday that ​it had fired ‍its hypersonic Oreshnik ​missile at ​a ⁠target in Ukraine as part of what it said was a massive ‌overnight strike on energy ​facilities and ‌drone manufacturing ‍sites there.

    The ⁠Defence Ministry said in a statement that the strike was a response to ​an attempted Ukrainian drone attack on one of President Vladimir Putin’s residences at the end of December.

    Kyiv has called the Russian assertion that it tried ​to attack the residence, in Russia’s Novgorod’s region, “a lie.”

    (Reporting by Andrew ​Osborn; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • US Judge Dismisses Lawsuit by Palestinian Americans Trapped in Gaza

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    Jan 8 (Reuters) – A federal judge dismissed on ‌Thursday ​a lawsuit demanding the U.S. ‌government conduct emergency rescues of Palestinian Americans and family members who are ​trapped in Gaza and trying to escape hardships caused by the war between Israel and Hamas.

    Chief Judge Virginia Kendall ‍of the U.S. District Court ​in Chicago said she lacked the power and tools to evaluate “delicate foreign policy decisions” belonging to ​the government’s Executive ⁠Branch, while expressing sympathy with “the impossible positions in which many of the plaintiffs have found themselves.”

    Nine Palestinian Americans, all U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents, sued in December 2024, accusing the U.S. government of violating their constitutional right to equal protection by abandoning them in a war zone and not evacuating ‌them as readily as it would evacuate other Americans.

    They said destroyed homes, food shortages, poor ​medical care, ‌mental anguish and other hardships ‍imposed a “mandatory, ⁠non-discretionary duty” on the government to evacuate people from Gaza.

    But the judge said she was ill-equipped to address how to coordinate an evacuation with neighboring countries, how to shepherd evacuees through dangerous “red zones,” which people are eligible for evacuations, and how the nonexistent U.S. diplomatic presence in Gaza would complicate the process.

    “Endeavoring to answer these questions – and many more like them – from the comfort of chambers is both undoable and would also invade ​the political branches’ constitutionally committed tasks of determining when, how, and under what circumstances evacuations from war zones should proceed,” Kendall wrote.

    The judge also said available evidence showed the U.S. government has developed an evacuation plan, and the nine plaintiffs had either been evacuated or rejected offers that did not cover immediate family members.

    Lawyers from the Council on American-Islamic Relations advocacy group, which represents the plaintiffs, had no immediate comment.  The U.S. Department of State did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Hamas-led militants killed about 1,200 people and abducted 251 others in an October 7, 2023, assault on Israel, according to Israeli ​data. More than 71,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s offensive in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s health ministry.

    The lawsuit was filed against former U.S. President Joe Biden, former Secretary of State Antony Blinken and former Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, and continued ​against their respective successors Donald Trump, Marco Rubio and Pete Hegseth.

    (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Nia Williams)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Lebanon Central Bank Seeks to Recuperate Embezzled Funds to Bolster Liquidity, Governor Says

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    BEIRUT, Jan 8 (Reuters) – Lebanon’s central bank will seek the ‌repayment ​of public funds embezzled by ‌at least one former central bank official and by lawyers and commercial ​bankers, to help guarantee its liquidity, Central Bank Governor Karim Souaid said on Thursday.

    Souaid did not name Riad ‍Salameh, the former central bank ​governor whose 30-year term ended in disgrace amid investigations into whether he embezzled more than $300 million ​between 2002 ⁠and 2015. 

    Instead Souaid told reporters that the central bank had filed a criminal complaint against an unnamed former official of the central bank, a former banker and a lawyer over alleged illicit enrichment through misuse of public funds. He said the operations were carried out through four offshore ‌shell companies in the Cayman Islands that he did not name. 

    COORDINATING WITH FRENCH INVESTIGATORS

    Souaid said ​the bank ‌would become a primary ‍plaintiff in the ⁠state’s investigation against Forry Associates, suspected of receiving commissions from commercial banks and transferring them out of the country. Forry is controlled by Salameh’s brother, Raja. Both Raja and Riad Salameh deny wrongdoing. 

    The pair are under investigation in France, Germany, Switzerland and other countries over the alleged embezzlement. Souaid said he would travel to France to meet with the investigators this month “to exchange highly sensitive information held by the French ​authorities.” 

    Souaid would not say how many people in total were suspected of involvement in the scheme or the full sum now thought to have been embezzled. 

    “Our mission is to pursue these individuals and entities, seek their conviction, and seize their movable and immovable assets and the proceeds of their illicit activities to ensure liquidity for the rightful owners, first and foremost the depositors,” he said. 

    A Lebanese source familiar with the central bank’s new measures said they were prompted by lots of evidence – both new material uncovered in the central bank’s records and other evidence made available from external investigators. The source ​said the bank’s leadership suspected Salameh was aided in his scheme by other members of the institution.

    Salameh was detained for nearly 13 months over the alleged financial crimes committed during his tenure, and was released last September after posting a record bail of more ​than $14 million. He remains in Lebanon under a travel ban.

    (Reporting by Maya Gebeily and Tala Ramadan; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Thirty-Nine Dead in Gambia Migrant Boat Sinking, Officials Say

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    BANJUL, Jan 8 (Reuters) – The death toll ‌after ​a boat carrying Europe-bound migrants capsized ‌off Gambia’s coast on New Year’s Eve has risen to 39, ​two government officials told Reuters, as survivors described the vessel as “overcrowded and dilapidated”.

    Gambia’s defence ministry last week ‍put the death toll at seven ​and said more than 200 people could have been on board.

    A total of 112 people ​had been ⁠rescued as of Wednesday, said Sima Lowe, public relations officer for Gambia’s Immigration Department, and a senior defence ministry official who asked not to be named as he was not authorised to speak to press.

    The migration route used by West Africans trying to reach Spain via the ‌Canary Islands is one of the world’s deadliest.

    Survivors interviewed by Reuters after being released from ​hospital ‌in Gambia this week said ‍the boat ⁠had been heading for Europe.

    Their stories highlight the risks and challenges faced by would-be migrants from West Africa who are often fleeing poverty, unemployment and lack of opportunities in their home countries.

    “It’s … desperation driving me to risk my life, seeking better opportunities in Europe due to poverty and lack of prospects at home,” said Sadibou Fatty, who described the journey as “traumatic”.

    “I survived the tragedy but lost friends and ​fellow passengers,” he said, adding that, unlike many others on board, he knew how to swim.

    Of the 39 dead, 24 were recovered in Gambian territory, while 15 were recovered in Senegalese territory, the defence official said.

    Passengers on board included citizens of Gambia, Senegal, Guinea, Mali, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso and Sierra Leone, the official said.

    “My friends in Europe inspired me to take the ‘back way,’” said Kajali Camara, another survivor, referring to irregular immigration routes via small boats.

    “They’re supporting their families back home, and I wanted a better life too,” he said.

    Gambia’s government said it intercepted more than 2,700 ​would-be migrants in 2025. 

    During the first 11 months of 2025, irregular migration into the European Union along the West African route fell 60%, according to the EU’s border agency Frontex.

    The drop is largely due to stronger prevention efforts by departure countries working ​with EU member states, Frontex has said.

    (Reporting by Pap Saine; Editing by Portia Crowe; Editing by Robbie Corey-Boulet, Alexandra Hudson)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • China Against ‘Political Disinformation’ About US Government Email Breach

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    BEIJING, Jan 8 (Reuters) – ‌China ​on Thursday ‌said it was against “politically ​motivated disinformation” in relation ‍to reports of Chinese hackers ​targeting staff ​in ⁠United States congressional committees in an email breach.

    “We have always opposed and lawfully combated hacker ‌activities, and we are even ​more opposed ‌to spreading ‍false information ⁠related to China for political purposes,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at a regular news ​briefing when asked about the cyberattack.

    The Financial Times reported on Wednesday that a Chinese hacking group has compromised emails used by staff members of powerful committees in the U.S. House ​of Representatives, citing people familiar with the matter.

    (Reporting by Laurie Chen; Writing by ​Liz Lee; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • US Congressional Panel to Subpoena Billionaire Leslie Wexner Over Epstein Ties

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    WASHINGTON, Jan 7 (Reuters) – The ‌U.S. ​House of Representatives Oversight ‌Committee will subpoena billionaire Leslie Wexner to sit for ​a deposition before the panel over his ties with late financier and convicted ‍sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, ​a Democratic lawmaker on the panel said on Wednesday. 

    “We secured key subpoenas ​for ⁠billionaire benefactor Les Wexner, and the executors of the Epstein estate,” Democratic Congressman Robert Garcia said in a statement in which he also thanked Republican U.S. Representative Anna Paulina Luna.

    Republicans currently hold a narrow majority ‌in the House of Representatives. The panel voted to approve the subpoenas ​on ‌Wednesday.

    Wexner has previously been ‍in ⁠focus for his association with the late financier, who was entrusted with managing the billionaire’s personal finances and served as the trustee of his charitable foundation.

    Wexner, a former CEO and founder of Victoria’s Secret-owner L Brands, has not been accused of criminal wrongdoing. The Wexner Foundation did not immediately respond ​to a request for comment late on Wednesday.

    President Donald Trump’s administration, under pressure from Trump’s political base, has ordered the U.S. Justice Department to release files tied to criminal probes of Epstein, who was friends with Trump in the 1990s, in compliance with a transparency law passed by Congress. 

    Trump had earlier made efforts to keep the files sealed. Trump has said he had a falling-out with the disgraced financier long before Epstein’s 2019 ​death in jail.

    The Justice Department revealed in late December it has 5.2 million pages of Epstein files left to review. Epstein had ties with many politicians and influential figures from different ​walks of life.

    (Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; editing by Michelle Nichols and Lincoln Feast.)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Cambodia Says Chen Zhi Among 3 Extradited to China After Transnational Crime Probe

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    Jan 7 (Reuters) – Cambodia said on Wednesday it ‌had ​extradited three people to ‌China at the request of Beijing following a months-long ​joint investigation into transnational crime, among them an individual named Chen Zhi.

    In a ‍statement, the interior ministry said ​those extradited on Tuesday were all Chinese nationals. It did ​not provide ⁠further details on Chen Zhi or the alleged crimes, but said his Cambodian citizenship had been revoked. 

    The United States and Britain in October sanctioned the Prince Group of businesses headed by a Cambodian-Chinese tycoon named Chen ‌Zhi, accusing it of operating large-scale online “scam centres” that used trafficked workers ​to ‌defraud victims globally.

    It was ‍not immediately ⁠clear if the Prince Group chair was among the individuals extradited. China’s foreign ministry and its public security did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment. 

    Cambodia’s interior ministry said in a statement it had arrested Chen Zhi and two other Chinese nationals, Xu Ji Liang and Shao Ji Hui, and had ​extradited them to China “within the scope of cooperation in combatting transnational crime and pursuant to a request from the relevant authorities of the People’s Republic of China”.

    Parts of Southeast Asia, including the border areas between Thailand, Myanmar and Cambodia, have become hubs for massive online fraud, with criminal networks earning billions of dollars from illegal compounds where trafficking victims are often forced to work.

    British sanctions targeted six entities and six individuals, including Chen Zhi, whom the U.S. and ​Britain accused of having overseen the construction of compounds used for online scams.

    The U.S. Treasury Department said it had taken what it described as the largest action ever in Southeast Asia, targeting 146 ​people within the Prince Group.

    (Reporting by Reuters Staff; Writing by Martin PettyEditing by Gareth Jones)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Brazil’s Bolsonaro Authorized to Go to Hospital for Tests After Fall

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    BRASILIA, Jan 7 (Reuters) – ‌Brazil’s ​Supreme ‌Court Justice Alexandre de ​Moraes authorized former President ‍Jair Bolsonaro to ​leave prison ​and ⁠be taken to a hospital for tests after he fell and hit his ‌head, a court decision ​showed on ‌Wednesday.

    Moraes authorized ‍Bolsonaro to ⁠go to the DF Star Hospital in Brasilia on January 7 to undergo a ​CT scan, an MRI, and an electroencephalogram.

    On Tuesday, Moraes had denied an earlier request for Bolsonaro to leave prison, arguing there was no need for him to ​be immediately taken to hospital.

    (Reporting by Ricardo Brito; Writing by ​Isabel Teles; Editing by Gabriel Araujo)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Re-Elected President of Central African Republic Invites Russia’s Putin to Visit, TASS Says

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    MOSCOW, Jan 7 (Reuters) – The ‌newly ​re-elected president of ‌the Central African Republic, Faustin-Archange Touadera, ​has invited Russian President Vladimir Putin to visit ‍his country, Russian state ​news agency TASS reported on ​Wednesday.

    Moscow ⁠has become a key ally of Touadera in recent years, with CAR in 2018 becoming the first West and Central African nation to ‌bring in Russia’s Wagner mercenaries as the chronically ​unstable ‌nation sought to fend ‍off ⁠several rebel groups.

    Touadera, in power since 2016, won a third term in office, provisional results showed this week, securing an outright majority in the presidential election held on December 28.

    In ​a video interview with TASS, Touadera called Putin a “great leader” and said the Kremlin chief was “very attentive” to relations with Bangui.

    Commenting on preliminary election results showing Touadera in the lead, the Wagner Group wrote on its Telegram channel: “We have no doubt that the chosen course of maintaining ​order and peace will prevail.”

    Touadera’s victory is likely to further Russia’s interests in the country, including in gold and diamond ​mining.

    (Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Lucy PapachristouEditing by Andrew Osborn)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Pakistan Eyes Defence Pact With Bangladesh, Sale of JF-17 Jets

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    ISLAMABAD, Jan 7 (Reuters) – The air force ‌chiefs ​of Pakistan and Bangladesh held talks ‌on a potential pact covering the sale of JF-17 Thunder fighter ​jets to Dhaka, Pakistan’s military said, as Islamabad widens its arms supply ambitions and beefs up ties ‍with Bangladesh.

    The talks in Islamabad ​come as Pakistan looks to capitalise on the success of its air force in the ​conflict with ⁠arch-foe India in May last year, the worst fighting in nearly three decades between the nuclear-armed neighbours.

    Pakistan’s Air Chief Marshal Zaheer Ahmed Baber Sidhu and Bangladesh counterpart Hasan Mahmood Khan had detailed talks on procurement of the JF-17 Thunder, a multi-role combat aircraft jointly developed with ‌China, the military’s press wing said.

    Pakistan has also assured Bangladesh of the “fast-tracked delivery of Super ​Mushshak ‌trainer aircraft, along with a ‍complete training ⁠and long-term support ecosystem,” it added in Tuesday’s statement.

    The talks signal improving ties as the South Asian nations have grown closer since massive protests in August 2024 drove then-Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to flee to India, shattering Dhaka’s relationship with New Delhi.

    “The visit underscored the strong historical ties between Pakistan and Bangladesh and reflected a shared resolve to deepen defence cooperation and build a long-term strategic ​partnership,” the military said.

    In the wake of Hasina’s ouster, Islamabad and Dhaka have resumed direct trade for the first time since the 1971 war that brought independence for Bangladesh, while their military officials have held several meetings.

    Under an interim administration led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, Bangladesh is set for general elections on February 12 that could lead to a significant government role for a once-banned Bangladeshi Islamist party with links to Pakistan.

    The JF-17s have become the cornerstone of the Pakistani military’s weapons development program, figuring in a deal with Azerbaijan and a $4-billion weapons pact ​with the Libyan National Army.

    On Tuesday, Pakistan’s defence minister said the success of its weapons industry could transform the country’s economic outlook.

    “Our aircraft have been tested, and we are receiving so many orders that Pakistan may not need the International Monetary ​Fund in six months,” Khawaja Asif told broadcaster Geo News.

    (Reporting by Saad Sayeed and Mubasher Bukhari; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Ahead of Election, Uganda’s Security Forces Are Accused of Using Violence Against the Opposition

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    WAKISO, Uganda (AP) — The Ugandan presidential candidate known as Bobi Wine wears a flak jacket and helmet while campaigning to protect himself from gunfire. But the safety gear offers no protection from the stinging clouds of tear gas that often follow him on the campaign trail.

    Wine is challenging President Yoweri Museveni, who has ruled Uganda since 1986 by repeatedly rewriting the rules to stay in power. Term and age limits have been scrapped, rivals jailed or sidelined, and state security forces are a constant presence at opposition rallies as Museveni seeks a seventh term in elections on Jan. 15.

    Wine, a musician-turned-politician whose real name is Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, faced similar setbacks in 2021, when he first ran for president. He was often roughed up by the police, clothes ripped from his body, and dozens of his supporters were jailed.

    In a recent interview with The Associated Press, he charged that this time “the military has largely taken over the election” and that at least three of his supporters have been killed in violent campaign events.

    “It has been very violent. There’s been a lot of impunity to the extent that we are denied the right to use the public roads,” he said. “We are hounded by security and followed by over 40 police and military cars. Everywhere I go to campaign, (the) day before, the military comes, beats up people, intimidates them, warns them against attending the rallies I address.”

    The human rights group Amnesty International says the use of tear gas, pepper spray, beatings and other acts of violence amount to “a brutal campaign of repression” ahead of the vote.


    The president is urging tear gas, not bullets

    In a New Year’s Eve address, the president said he recommended that the security forces use more tear gas to break up crowds of what he called “the criminal opposition.”

    “Using tear gas for rioters is both legal and non-lethal,” Museveni said in a televised speech. “It doesn’t kill. It is much better than using live bullets.”

    Security forces, notably the military, have repeatedly broken up Wine’s campaign rallies, sending his supporters scampering into ditches and swamps.

    Critics note that Museveni, in contrast, campaigns without disruption and can go wherever he wants. Some charge that the election is simply a ritual to keep Museveni in power, not a fair exercise that could possibly lead to a change of government in the east African nation of 45 million.

    Wine, the most prominent of seven opposition candidates, has urged supporters to show courage before the security forces, although he has not called outright for protests. He said he wants his supporters to cast “protest votes” in large numbers against Museveni’s party on election day.

    In his interview with the AP, Wine cited at least three deaths at his rallies, including a man shot by the military and another run over by a military truck. The offenses can go unpunished because the electoral authorities, the police and the army “serve the sitting government,” he said. Police spokesman Kituuma Rusoke said he was not aware of the alleged incidents.


    The president’s son hopes to take power one day

    Museveni is the third-longest-serving leader in Africa. Now he seeks to extend his rule into a fifth decade.

    He first took power by force as the leader of a guerrilla army that said it wanted to restore democracy after a period of civil war and the cruel dictatorship of Idi Amin.

    Decades ago, Museveni criticized African leaders who overstayed their time in power. Years later, Ugandan lawmakers did the same thing for him when they jettisoned the last constitutional obstacle — age limits — for a possible life presidency.

    His son, army chief Muhoozi Kainerugaba, has asserted his wish to succeed his father, raising fears of hereditary rule as Museveni has no recognizable successor in the upper ranks of the ruling party, the National Resistance Movement.

    Museveni has been elected six times, nearly all of those polls marred by violence and allegations of vote rigging. He has since fallen out with many of the comrades who fought alongside him, including some who say he betrayed the ideals of their bush-war struggle. One of them is Kizza Besigye, once Museveni’s personal doctor, who has been jailed for over a year and repeatedly denied bail after facing treason charges.

    Besigye was Uganda’s most prominent opposition leader before the rise of Wine, 43, who presents a different challenge for Museveni as the face of youthful hope for change. Wine has a large following among working-class people in urban areas, and his party has the most seats of any opposition party in Parliament.

    In the 2021 election, Wine secured 35% of the vote, while Museveni, with 58%, posted his worst-ever result, establishing Wine as a serious challenger for power.

    Yet Museveni dismisses Wine as an agent of foreign interests and questions his patriotism. “Mr. Kyagulanyi and his evil foreigners that back him fail to understand that Uganda is a land of spiritual and political martyrs,” Museveni said in his New Year’s Eve address.


    Civic leaders have also been targeted

    Sarah Bireete, a government critic who runs the non-governmental group Center for Constitutional Governance, was arrested last week and criminally charged over allegations she unlawfully shared data related to the national voters’ registry. The charges are yet to be substantiated.

    A magistrate remanded her to jail until Jan. 21, a decision that drew condemnation from some civic leaders as politically motivated because it silenced Bireete’s work as a commentator ahead of voting.

    Before her arrest, Bireete had told the AP that Museveni’s Uganda was “a military dictatorship,” not a democracy.

    “The evidence is out for everyone to see that indeed Uganda can no longer claim to be a constitutional democracy,” she said.

    Uganda has not witnessed a peaceful transfer of presidential power since independence from colonial rule six decades ago. That raises the stakes as an aging Museveni increasingly depends on a security apparatus helmed by his son, Gen. Kainerugaba.

    Kainerugaba has warned force could be used against Wine, including threatening to behead him in one of several tweets widely condemned as reckless a year ago.

    Museveni “can’t credibly claim to oppose repressive tactics that his own administration has employed for years,” said Gerald Bareebe, a Ugandan who is an associate professor of politics at Canada’s York University, speaking of Museveni’s advice to the security forces.

    Bareebe pointed out that some within Museveni’s party think the security forces have gone too far. Even they “are outraged by the brutal tactics employed by the police and military against innocent civilians,” he said.

    Video journalist Patrick Onen in Kampala, Uganda, contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • Video Recordings by Brown University Shooting Suspect Deemed a Confession

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    By Nate Raymond and Steve Gorman

    BOSTON, Jan 6 (Reuters) – Federal prosecutors on ‌Tuesday ​released transcripts of video recordings in which ‌they say the gunman who carried out last month’s fatal mass shooting at Brown University and ​later took his own life had admitted to planning the attack months in advance.

    The four videos recorded by the suspect, Claudio Neves Valente, ‍were discovered during a search of the ​storage locker in Salem, New Hampshire, where he was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot on December 18, ending a six-day manhunt, ​the prosecutors said.

    Valente, ⁠48, a Portuguese national who had attended Brown two decades ago as a doctoral student in physics, slipped into an engineering building on the Ivy League campus on December 13 and opened fire with a handgun, killing two students and injuring nine others, according to police.

    Authorities later determined that after fleeing the Providence, Rhode Island, scene of the Brown attack, Valente killed a ‌physics professor from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in a separate shooting at his home outside Boston.

    Valente and the slain ​MIT ‌professor Nuno Loureiro had once been ‍classmates in Lisbon, authorities ⁠said after linking the two shooting incidents. But investigators have yet to offer a motive for either case.

    The newly released transcripts of the videos, recovered by the FBI from an electronic device and translated from Portuguese to English, mark the first statements attributed to Valente since his death but shed little new light on the Brown tragedy.

    According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Boston, which has overseen the federal investigation of the shootings, Valente “admitted that he had been planning the Brown University shooting for a long time.”

    In the rambling, disjointed recordings prosecutors say ​he made while holed up in the storage unit after the shootings, Valente refers to a shell casing injuring one of his eyes and adds that he had “already planned this for a little more” than “six semesters.”

    Except for repeated mentions of his eye injury, however, Valente speaks elliptically of what has happened, never explicitly talks about firing a gun or killing anyone, and offers no insights into what precipitated the violence ascribed to him.

    “I don’t know if there are any kind of implications of what I wanted to do or not,” he said. “It was all incompetent, but at least something was done. … The only objective was to [pause] leave more or less on my own terms and — and it’s — it’s already long overdue.”

    He alludes to vague, unspecified grievances, while expressing no remorse.

    “To say that I was ​extraordinarily satisfied, no, but I also don’t regret what I did,” he said in one video. “I am not going to apologize, because during my lifetime no one sincerely apologized to me.”

    Federal prosecutors said that the evidence collected to date continues to rule out any basis for concerns about ongoing public safety threats associated with the shootings, but ​that investigators’ search for a motive would continue.

    (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Writing and additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Michael Perry)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Russia Sends Submarine to Escort Tanker the US Tried to Seize off Venezuela, WSJ Reports

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    Jan ‌6 (Reuters) – ​Russia has ‌deployed a ​submarine ‍and ​other ​naval vessels ⁠to escort an aging ‌oil tanker, Bella ​1, ‌the ‍Wall Street Journal ⁠reported on Tuesday , ​citing a U.S. official.

    Reuters could not immediately verify the report.

    (Reporting by Bipasha ​Dey in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Tom Hogue)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • G7 Finance Ministers to Meet in Washington to Discuss Rare Earths, Three Sources Say

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    BRUSSELS, Jan 6 (Reuters) – ‌Finance ​ministers from ‌the Group of Seven ​nations will meet in ‍Washington on January 12 ​to discuss ​rare ⁠earths supplies, three sources familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

    One of the sources added ‌that price floors for rare ​earths would ‌be a ‍point of ⁠discussion, among other critical mineral topics.

    G7 countries, except Japan, are heavily or exclusively reliant on China for ​a range of materials from rare earth magnets to battery metals. In June last year, the G7 agreed on an action plan to secure their supply chains and boost their ​economies.

    (Reporting by Makiko Yamazaki in Tokyo, Julia Payne in Brussels and Trevor Hunnicutt ​in Washington; Editing by Alex Richardson)

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  • Only Greenland and Denmark Can Decide on Their Future, European Leaders Say in Joint Statement

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    COPENHAGEN, ‌Jan ​6 (Reuters) – Greenland ‌belongs to ​its ‍people, ​and ​only Denmark ⁠and Greenland can decide ‌on matters concerning ​their ‌relations, ‍the leaders of ⁠France, Germany, Italy, ​Poland, Spain, Britain, and Denmark said in a joint statement on Tuesday.

    (Reporting ​by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen, editing ​by Terje Solsvik)

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  • Slovenia’s President Calls Parliamentary Election for March 22

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    Jan 6 (Reuters) – Slovenia will ‌hold ​parliamentary elections on ‌March 22 after President Natasa Pirc-Musar signed ​a decree on Tuesday calling for a poll ‍in the NATO and ​European Union member state, in ​what ⁠will likely be a closely-contested race.

    “The decree… marks the start of an important period for democracy in which citizens will again decide on ‌the future direction of our country,” Pirc-Musar said ​in ‌a statement.

    Since June 2022, ‍Slovenia ⁠has been run by the centre-left coalition government of Prime Minister Robert Golob, comprising ministers from Golob’s Freedom Movement party, Social Democrats and the Left. Populist former premier Janez Jansa ​leading the SDS party has remained the bloc’s strongest opposition.

    Pirc-Musar said that she wanted a new government to be formed quickly and that she would award the mandate “to the one who brings in 46 votes” in the 90-member parliament.

    She also appealed to representatives of political parties and ​media to keep the pre-election rhetoric calm and focus on finding solutions to the challenges facing society rather than on ​divisions.

    (Reporting by Daria Sito-Sucic; Editing by Alex Richardson, Alexandra Hudson)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • China, South Korea to Carry Out Cultural Exchanges in Orderly Manner, Beijing Says

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    BEIJING, Jan ‌6 (Reuters) – ​China and ‌South Korea agreed to ​carry out cultural exchanges ‍in an orderly ​manner, ​the ⁠Chinese foreign ministry said on Tuesday, when asked if Beijing would welcome South ‌Korean culture exports in the ​future.

    South ‌Korean President ‍Lee Jae ⁠Myung met with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on Monday, seeking to restore ​ties between the two neighbours.

    The two countries would “gradually” increase exchanges of cultural content and hold working-level talks on movies, dramas and others, Wi Sung-lac, Lee’s security ​adviser, told a press briefing after the leaders’ summit.

    (Reporting by Liz ​Lee; Editing by Christian Schmolinger)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Dutch Train Traffic Halted Due to Snow and Ice

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    AMSTERDAM, Jan ‌6 (Reuters) – ​Snow and ‌ice continued to ​disrupt traffic in ‍the Netherlands on ​Tuesday ​halting ⁠all trains and forcing the cancellation of hundreds of flights.

    Dutch railway company ‌NS said no trains ​could operate ‌until ‍at least ⁠0900 GMT due to problems caused by snow and subzero temperatures.

    At Amsterdam ​Schiphol airport, airline KLM cancelled at least 300 flights for Tuesday as the winter weather crippled traffic at one of Europe’s main transit hubs ​for the fifth day in a row.

    (Reporting by Bart ​Meijer; Editing by Michael Perry)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Irish PM Aims for Deeper Trade Talks With China in Beijing

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    BEIJING, Jan 6 (Reuters) – Ireland’s Prime Minister ‌Micheal ​Martin is set to ‌have more in-depth talks on trade with China’s No. 2 official ​on Tuesday, working to strengthen strategic ties with the world’s second-largest economy amid frosty China-European ‍Union relations.

    Martin’s scheduled meeting with ​Chinese Premier Li Qiang forms part of his five-day trip that he said ​would include “a ⁠significant economic dimension”, a clip posted on the Irish Taoiseach’s X handle on Monday evening showed.

    The Irish leader was seen in the clip telling media that he would discuss with Li in “greater detail” trade issues such as beef exports and China’s recently ‌imposed tariffs on dairy, a day after a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    “I ​discussed obviously ‌the situation in terms ‍of Irish ⁠beef exports into China, the tariff situation in respect of dairy products,” Martin said, adding that Xi “undertook to engage with Chinese officials in respect of those specific issues.”

    Martin described his meeting with Xi on Monday as a “warm and constructive engagement”, covering a range of issues including bilateral and EU-China ties.

    “On a broader level, I think the President was keen that ​Europe and China would have a broader framework to govern trade into the future,” he said.

    Xi had told Martin during the meeting that China and the EU should “bear the long-term picture in mind”, according to state news agency Xinhua.

    Ties between China and the EU have been tense since the EU imposed levies on Chinese electric vehicle imports in 2024. China has since retaliated with a series of measures including the latest tariffs on EU dairy products.

    Last week, China also set import quotas and additional tariffs on beef imports ​from this year, a move affecting global exporters of the meat into the Asian country.

    The first Taoiseach to visit China since 2012, Martin has recently downplayed the Irish intelligence agency’s portrayal of China as a “hostile state actor”, ​preferring instead to adopt a long-term and strategic understanding of China.

    (Reporting by Liz Lee; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Magnitude 6.2 Quake Strikes Western Japan

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    TOKYO, ‌Jan ​6 (Reuters) – An ‌earthquake with ​a ‍preliminary magnitude ​of ​6.2 hit western ⁠Japan on Tuesday, the ‌Japan Meteorological Agency ​said.

    The epicenter ‌of ‍the earthquake ⁠was the eastern part ​of Shimane Prefecture, the agency said, adding that a tsunami warning had not ​been issued.

    (Reporting by Satoshi SugiyamaEditing ​by Chang-Ran Kim)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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